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Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1860-07-21

Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1860-07-21 page 1

r ,,,, VOLUME XXIV. COLUMBUS. OHIO. SATURDAY MORNING. JULY. 21. 1S60. NUMBER 70. (Ohio tatr nmuin DAILT. TRI-WF.KKI.Y AND WIEKLT, BT COOKR, HURTT CO. OOcli Miller'. BuiMlBf. No. Ill Jest Town.traaf. term Invarutbly in Advance. Dam - - lOOOP"-"' .. ' By the Carrier, per week, - .... fS""'. " . - ......tmn n THE RAIliR. EKBIH OF IIMHI " - , -. . . i nv, J2" On. aquar. I weee, .S .Sooths, 18 00 On. IwA., J 0; On. On. On. On 00 1 wnk, 1 ' Idaye, 100 id.;., " 1 day. IXV1SIA.I.T I AD- Jt.ro C months 16 "0 I On. 8 months, 1" 0" I On 1 month., OS On. 1 month. 5 0 On mr For niarrlag. nolle. 23 oenU A"C' WKKKLT ADVEBTI8IN0 P.r Square, on. insertion "laplayed Adferti.om.nU hlf more than th. above "Adrertlaement. leaned and placed In th. column of Ba Hal Notleee, itmbl tkt oriimtuv rati. All notice require to be published by taw, 'J If ordered on th. Inside exclusively alter th. Br. . eek. SO par cent, more than th. ahov. rates; bat all inch will atiiear In th. Tri-Weekly without cherRa. ' S..., Card., not .xceHllng Br. lines, per year, ln.ld., ,1ffiUo;lm,ng.,chari..hl..oc.M1.nr.comP.n.. AUMAdi. mu.t fcaU i- ainno. Thl. rale will not be varied from. .No Advertisement taken .cot for a dellnlta period. Columbus business directory. IlarberH. w M. CtlTT BAHUKIl, Would notlly hi. numerous friend, and customers that he ha. returned, and will bereafwi- be found at 1his old .land under Bartllt A Smith'. Dank, UlSu solicit, a return ol hit old cu.tom.-r.. , 0"" Clottilng. J. OOOIJMAN V BON, Dealer. In Beady and Custom-made Clothlnir, flent'ii Fur-nt.l Goods! Hat.. Cap.. Trunk., V". 1 South High St.. corner of Broad. ni)2, W-fliy A m w otl MSWill. ADAM. ,T,,y.WART A, STIMSOM, Merchant Tailor., No. 138 Btrmt, opposite Ooilale House, Columbus. Ohio, deal in be.t grade "J''1'' rWn are. and Vestlnirs. Kmploy none but good work-nC! ln.r'." oi nts; do not disappoint in time; ch. re fair prices, and require prompt pay. aprl3,'i-aprtioclly f,roccrn. Wholesale and Betall'Dealer I" O' and Produc. Koutheast corner of Town and Fourth sts., tol"'"1"' Particular attention paid to Consignment V'"'li A B COLUMBUS BUSINESS DIRECTORY. AlturiicyN. P. R. AND J. A. WILCOX ! Attoralee at Law; coraar of High and Broad .treet.. P. B. Wilcox giro, particular attention o preparing written Opinion, and ArgumauU upon Questions ol Law. my:)-d&in-s A F. A. B. 8IMKISH, Attorney at Law and Notary Public. Offloa No. t Odeon Hall, oppoalta the Bl.ta Honas, Culumbua, Ohio. mrtl-'i-dlT MISCELLANEOUS. Greelcj '8 Elastic Hack and Centre SUSPENSION PANTS. THIE aiGIIT TO MAKES PANTS WITH thl. lmin,Tment ha. been oMalned of the Patentee B. J. UKKKLKY, It th. .uliacriber., who al.j bar. for .ale, and expect to keep on hand, GREELEY'S CELEBRATED BRACE SUSPENDERS, alike diirable for Gentlemen, Ladle., Boyi and Miea. Theee Brace Su.peilder. are .aid 10 excel all other, for eaM, duralillily and cheapne... being a gentle brace for the .hoiiUer.. aud at the .am. tlmo a molt pleaaant iup. port for the Paul, or Skirt.. BTEWAKT 5c BTIMSON, . Merchant Tailors, 138 S. High St., Colnmbul. aprl3,'60-dly.aprviUo TREMONT HOUSE, 2VX aHaillon, Ohio, J. PENOYEIt - - PROPRIETOR. CllAKOES REASONABLE. Jyiol.lm. for, Produce. Confectionery. O. H. L.ATIMK11, No. tM South High ... belween Bich and FH.nd Jjr. Nuu, and Famhy Qroceriua; UOi wnaioB nu broiderw Mournlnn HnnlkMel..efs. Hmlmd, Kiviurtv n r.tinarUa " l Mu.e. n..mi., K1....V1 Iioots, Shoes and lirogans! At WhoUialt by the Que or Dozen, by JACOB BURNET, JR., No. tt Pearl St., between Vine afc ITace, Oincinxiati, O. AFULl ASSORTMENT OP BOOTS, Shoe, and llrogan.i eiecially adapted to the Welern Retail Trade, alwitvn on hand. Caeh and prompt time buyer, will find good, of tha be.t quality, at the lowest market price.. Canh buyer, are particularly Invited to examine the utork. a. H'clal Inducement, will beiflored to thoae who buv "('anh in hand." Particular attention will bo given to Riling ca.h order YOUTH'S, MIMSKS AND CHILDREN'S "TIPPED 0001)8" ALWAYS ON HAND. luiarlO-'uO-dOmK.A B Oonfectioneriu. ItankM. BARTLlf SMITH, ' . . . . . v i m r.nln. Ana nncnrreui Banker, ami ; " ,, ,tie. in the W SU. AoTBuildln. Nc, 7 South ,.Jgh .treet. , - Real Point Iace Collars. MALTKSB LACE COLL AH IN NEW hapen, llnmlton I, nee 'ollare. Linen and Pique Traveling Seta, Frilled Mn.lin Seta, Mil.lln Collar., new .hanu, Knibroldereil Trlniminga, Valenclenne. and Thread l.ace.. I.ace l.iine. rill. APItie, liemnieu, ouicni'ii, r.m. ing, Magic Ruining Mccvo BIotiiIn and Mu.lin., and all kind, of Lace and Kinbroidered Muslin (iooil. in the great. TETER BAIN, First door north of Neil House. est variety, Just opelied. Juno Coal, &c. n. K. CHAMPION, h?&s South Third Street, nearly oppo.lt. Steam Fire . Hon.e. nolumbn..Ohlo. n"ir'"""-t- II I. WIATT St. BHO., Keep constantly on hand a choice .npply of Confection., Cigar, and Pure Liquor. ISO TOWS STREET, UOLVMRVS, OHIO. Order, promptly filled. We doal cheap for cash. Glr. t call. iny4.d:!m-s a a Manufactures. CLEVBLANDBBU8H COMPANY, Manufacturer, of all kind,, of Br.... , JWriBrn.he.,87 Str- 1""hl r'e-hand maAeioorder: I C. Pendleton, w,. ... novl8'fu.diy IT". Harris. House, Sign and Carriage Painter, OnwiHitu Jnhn h. Htlrt H ire-room,) HIUII 8THKET, COLUMBUS, OHIO ap3U-d.lm-E A H. Watcu,Jewelryi D. DC Ml A 11, Watch Maker'and EngAv. ha. for .tree", one dK.r .outh of Goodale Uoum. anr28,'fiO-dly ;a KOCKEY, BROTHER & TWIGO, manufaturr. or S.UrERIOK WOOD PUMPS, No. 2'lfi East Friend streets, Columbus, Ohio. Order, from abroad promptly filled by sending depth of Til. MilTer.Tlcmbors oTXUjf 'S&JtlK Mey 7,1800. dlim E. A. B. Hardware. ko.geuk co., miPmw .ale and Bet.il Ir. er. u, . Qonn r,irm. Cutlery, non-e" - and Willow Ware, Cor- . rgejwrrTw; . " r" nooU Binding. . Wnder and Blank Book Manufacturer, High Street, X.,c BIost TllOrOIISjIl anil Practical "t'wee";Mfand"Gay Street., Oolumbu., 0. MERCANTILE INSTITUTE IN THE WEST. f RADUATES ARE COMPETENT TO KEEP THE 1 1 book, of any business house in the country, by Ponble Commercial &Ma11icmalical Colleges OONBOLID ATEP I AT COLUMHUS, 0., DEOEMufclv 1st, 1HSU, between I mavH'fiO-dlyJ A R. nhirv of from 8600 to SslK) per annum a full ... nnllmiipd course is nivt-n in all the dewrt' 1 nun1 IIM I fown stroet., Colnmlius, O. Hoots and ShoeN. HAVLDEN &. CO., . ,. nnl,.ln T .illi Entry, and earn i mania in our Columbus, 0., I'lttsburgh, Ta., aud .1ul..l.ta V . rutlfireN. v..r Tuitlrxi. K4H. navable in advance. Student, re view at pleasure. No vacation. Time, from B to 9 week. Total cost, about $75. For lull particulars, aiiuivss AIcCOY A CO., fel,Kt.'nnilAi1 flnliimhus. O. Boeeeer toW.L. Mercer, Dealer In Ladir, and Children bt Columbus. " A. C. BBTHBE iw. .nd Shoe maker. French Boot, and Shoe, made to order. Rubla-r Boot, and f hoe. "ew-."cd repa.r, E I r ' " No. 37 N:.iighH,lu,ubu.01 ' " " REMOVAL, Dotl. A Co., Manufacturer, and Wholejal. Boot, and Shoe., have removed to No. 61 Odeon buiiu inl High StTopposite the State House, and keep on h.ml. large "Vock of Fine and Staple Good., to.which they invite th. attention of MerchauU and Dealer.. Ieh7n) . ; BILLIARD TABLES. V Pvv 1XX s ti 1It fcii n. M v. " OOMS IN AMROS HALL, HIGH STREET.-TKETH . i..ii In a Kientiflc mannor.and Set. fur- .h.d that are warranted to please. novlrr? R' -r; improved Billiard Tables and COMBINATION CU5I11UJNS, Protected by Itttert patent dated Feb. 19, 1856 Oct. 28, 1850; Dec. 8, 1857; Jan. 12, 18u8; JV'oo. 16, 1858, and March 20, 1859. ' BSB-The recent improvements in these tables make them unsurpassed in the world. They are now offered to the scientific Billiard players Rf oombining .peed with truth. never before obtained In any Rllllnrd Table. Manufactory No.. 65, 07, aud (19 Crosby Strcot. I'UELAN A COLLENDER, HOTELS NOltTII AMERICAN HOTEL, 80UTII WEST CORNER OF THE ' PARK MANSFIELD, OHIO. ,'a TOWNLEY - - Proprietor. Formerly of Man.flelU Jowtion Dining Room. ny21-d3inJMB EAGHiH IXOTEIj, OAMDRIDGE, OHIO. JAMES VIRTUE, : : Proprietor. myMdam-i a PR. .Hor.niKOa. b. aow. SUoodlnKor ct Drown, Munufactitrer. and Dealer. In all kinds of CABINET FURNITURE, Spring Beds, Chairs, Mattrasses, Looking Glasses, Ac. 104 Sua KUh Sererf, folumtmt, 0to. VUndertaking promptly attended to. n)4 dly-iA. cabin-et-wabe1 I JOILV )mruuivg, S NO. 1TT EAST FRIEND STREET, HAH A FULL ASSORTMENT or ALL KINDS OT Plain. Kancy and Ornamental Karnlture. Mann. acturea Furniture to order t'HEAl'ER than any other., tabllshment in the city. Ti. present stock to be sold positively at rest. . . l i'uui,&i aiiiiiiaoneiu a superior manner, lanl-dly Xlxoliaugo XZotel, OPPOSITE GREAT UNION DEPOT, AND KHAR Cnlumbul ex Plqua R. IT. Depot, C0LVMBV8, OHIO. Charge, per Day, - - 11.00. WILLIAM POWELL, pr:in-d:lm E.A.D. Proprietor. M'Vat II. M. Roosh STAOBY HOUSE, Opposite the Court House, ZANE3VILL, OHIO. inayltldum cab JI'VAY A ROL'SH, Proprietor.. II. Moores, Carriage Manufacturer, Coraer 'Diird and Rich ttret. RETURNS HIS THANKS FOR PAST favors, and solicit, a continuance of the same. Per seus wishing to purchase are requested to call and exam Ine my stock and prices. Particular attention given to repairing. The attention or customers is Invited to my Patent rlpring handy .Wagons tad Buggies. All work warranted. H. MOORES. pr21-dly. Columbus, Ohio. Joliu. Uonto tta Mauufucturar. of Go. Hanllla, Cotton, Tarred and Hemp Hope, Cotton and Hemp Packing, Cords, I. Ine. and Twine, lu all their variety, and dealer, iu Oakuro, Anchors, Blocks, Patent Seine Twine, Main atreet, one door South of Front, oiisraiisriTAXi, o. marl'l-flOfli.m K. A. P. ANOTHER GREAT TRIUMPH!! W.n.DODD'S&CO'S CELEBRATED CONCRETE FIBE AND T3t-xrsl4rr Proof (Ditto 'tatc $0imtJiL COLUMBUS: SATURDAY MORKLNO. JULY 21, 1860. The Circumlocution Odes at Washington The following we clip from tbo Philadelphia Preti : : Dickeni hai made immertal th delaji and ecoentricilies and the oiroamlooution of Oorera-merit offices. Hi. aatira applie not onlj to Enr-land but to America. I accompanied a friend of mine lo th Tre.iury, the other day en a matter of buisineii. He had the good lock, by a imall paragraph in oa of the appopri-ation bills, to be entitled to a respectable sum of money. After a little vexatious beating in th buihes, hi aceount vaa started for th ohaa. A oourtly old gentleman, with gold ipeolacl and rubicund nose, handled it auspiciously amelled it all over, pored over several large ofiic books, then tumbled through the pages of oalf-bound, well-worn statutes, signed his nam with great deliberation, and gar us to th charge of a little owlish messenger, who after taking us through a passage, silent as the gray, unless when other messengers passed with muflled steps, down winding stairs, along another gloomy, passage, with dignified bow turned us over to a sour man, who was Tory long, very primly dressed, entirely hairless, and altogether unprepossessing.He eyed th paper closely, smelled it to his satisfaction, and gar us his autograph, and sent another Palinurus to guide us to the next port. And so we went to a doten offices, in each of which a like smellimg process took place, and at the end we had a paper oovered with autographs and chirographic mill-stone to mark the progress of Ihe ease. There were greasy, slovenly, mathematical old mon, and old men as preoise as Sir Roger de Coverly himself. Nearly all of them had soen a quarter of a century in doing this work. At lust we arrived at the warrant, and went away utterly bewildered at the tortuous road that leads to th coffers of our beloved Unole Sam (bat is, for sums less than a million. Sympathy of the Body with an Amputated (rf.. Member At Tower's Mill, in Lanesborougb, Mass , on Tuesday,! young man named Jerry Swan was caught by the arm in some machinery, and tha limb was so badly broken and mangled that immediate amputation was neoessary. This was successfully performed, but according to the Pittsburgh Eagle, Mr. Swan's connections with the dissevered limb did not cease with the operations. The Eagle saya: "On recovering from the stupor (produced by the use of chloroform,) Mr.Swan still complained of Ha aching hand. Late in the evening his distress became very great, and he insisted that the hand was cramped by being doubled up. The limb bad been placed in a small box and burried. His attendants dug it up and straightened the hand and he was soon easier. This morning the limb was again buried. But he soon oomplained of a sensation of oold and great pain in it. It was accordingly takin up again, wrapped up, and deposited in a tomb, since which he is again relieved." Tho Lata from tha Japanese Original Letter from "Tammy." Th following is a letter written by Tommy to a gentleman of this oity, as the Niagara was proceeding to sea, and sent back by tha pilot: Niw Yobk, June 30, 18C0. My dear , Philadelphia. You do not know how sorry I am I eoald not hak band farewell with you that morning when I leave Philadelphia. Never mind, I shall see you again bye-and-bye when I com back to America, or you perhaps com to Japan. I like Philadelphia very much beautiful place, great many manufactures there, and plenty friends. I am sorry I ean't get th pant and other things that I promised you in th hotel of Continental of your own place. Pleas tell my compliments to . I am much obliged to her to send me beautiful dress. I shall take it back to Japan to be try wear by our ladies, esteemed jnuch. I am much obliged for your beautiful picture. I shall take it back to Japan, hang it tip in my room and remember you all the time. I could not find yonr brother, who introduced by your letter; I want see him very ranch. Mr. Thomas took good care of me, but he has left New York now. Please tak these two likeness, one for yourself and the other to on of my friends, who I promisa in your own place, when I was there; be send me the letters from two each, but I could not send him the letters, my compliments lo tell him. I am much oblige to you. Mr. was sent me letter, give him my likeness. I am now on board vessel Niagara, going ahead. I seud to you from pilot. I am truly your good friend, (Signature in Japanese) Tatisu Onojsbo ("Tommi,") At Yeddo, Japan. Noti. Th letter enclosed two likenesses, on for th gentleman mentioned above, with his name and address, with the compliments of the donor, neatly written on the back, and th other the same way for th one who received the letter. Th Augustus (Ga.) Chronicle and Sentinel says, that, "to say th least of it, there is great danger of the election of Linooln. To prevent it beyond a doubt, there must be a ooalition of his opponents; and we think the most feasible plan is, for the Opposition to let everything els go, and devote their whol energies to the Stat of New York. Hor thirty-five votes, if they can be take awny from Lincoln, will defeat his revolutionary party, even though ha gets every other Northern vote, and California he cannot get. We have faith to believe tkat a union of the Bell and Douglas men in New York on on ticket would oarry three hundred thousand voles, and Lincoln will, probably, not get exceeding two hundred and eighly-five thousand. But to prevent all uncertainty, we hope the Bell, Breckinridge, and Douglas men will all unite on a common ticket and let the vote be oast, Douglas, 20, Bell, 10; and Breckinridge, 6; or, in fact, in proportion to the popular vote cast for each. By such an arrangement Lincoln cm be defeated, and by no other way that we know of." Severely patrol lu Hie l.attj (ireat Fir at Juun .'. Towers ''. Warehouse, (,'ltM'tmiutl, OUlo, June IbllO. Jlo.-ul Llits Cei-tiiLcate. IHar-Kiu. W. U Uo.'u a I'm (,'. .. ( r Heiewlth w ,,, , , ' ,.!. iOiit .T Safe during last HaUllUn -ills; it i taastrous lliv, we.i ur entire store wa. destroe"l. . "e Mged with uumttjont and heat about thesufe.everj llilnulu it. immediate locality being de.. troved, aud it at all intlamuialile, reduced to ashes. We imrcnascd tula safe from yon alwnt six months ago, oadii ha, mtirelf fulJlIM ynur representations. u ..... ,.niu nFU,rMl ll nur Luoksaud papers with. out any line or letter being deuced, but tci(mi tifn of Are lieing leit on mem. . ,n .......... I..- fr..m fire ami teen heal was so entire, that ,1,. p.. varnish, and paint on the inside wood work i. nHrfect as when the .ate was marie. as perfect as w lien tue juHN 0. TOWERS 4 CO. We h.Tesomeof the papers that were In tliissafe during the tire, and will lie ulcasua to uow mem iu j r Our safes have naver failed to preserve their content. from either Fife or Burglar; ana aro ewireip re. jrom ''The construction of th. BURGLAR PR"P I it-- -...i (n ..n,,r.tll,n with our "GlthA r AMEKl CAN KEY KKUISTKR KICK" (which possesses the greas aud mlHuvt advantnge of having no krp cnrlty of a nermi.M.n;; key en which liW,(Hjo,(HKI change can he mule,) tnoy win uemuuu :" ' (!T i Anl A DAMS fe FIELD, Lumber Merch.nts, Dealers In all kind, of Worked Floor-lg. Lumber, Lath and Shingles, corner of Spring and Water Ste., Uolumhus, who. myT dly gnle Manufacturers. Restaurants. BULL'S HEAD SALOON, EATING AND HOARDING HOUSE. JOSEPH SWAIN, Proprietor. Th. finest brand, of Liquor and Tobacco oonatantly on hand, and rooms re-ilttes Ira a neat and fomfortable style, No. 144 Fourth street. In th. Market Placo. m3-d3in-s a n J. M. ZIG1-EB, Ic.Cre.rn Saloon. Neil'. New Building, corner Bay and High atreet., Oolumbu., Ohio. Alw Dealer in 'Con r.cfioo.. Choice Liquor., and a variety of Fane,r No-.a t. mji-utya BILLIARD TABLES, W J. Sharp'. Tulles, with his newly invented patent Cushions, woll known to ho supplier to any now in use Patented November 15, Ittntt. Orders addressed to 148 Xultou St., N. Y., the ouly place where they are manufactured. my7-dom Jyio-d: HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S Extract Buchn, Etxraot Buchn, Extract Bnchu, Extract Buchn, Extract Bnchu, Extract Bucuu. FrtH HECRET ASD FOR SECRET AND HELMBOID'I II ELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S II ELM HOLD'S Extract Bnchu, Kxtract Bnchu, Kxtract Bnchu, . Kxtract Bnchu, Extract Buchn, Kxtract Bncnn. DELICATE DISORDERS' VELICATH VISUKUKttn. m. l ,mi UJ S x- ;-- - .;- IV f AMMMOTH Ivl LIA 7mn CULTIVATOR, Ell ted and Published by Sullivan D. Harris, at Colombu. Ohio, for One Dollar per 7 1 " STAMPING AND EMBROIDERY, No. 303 8. HlKh-St.-Mr.. Cox haying removed from Eighth St. to her present residence, IfPreP""!1 'd?,? " kinds of line and fancy Stamping and Embroidery at the loweet prices, on short notice. mvildm tan STEAM POWER B1L- IARD TABLE Manufactory, J. M. Brunswick a n.,.,,ri,.inr Factorv on . n. corner oi nim ana Canal Streets. Office and Warehouse, No. 8 Sixth Street, between Maiu aud Walnut, Ciutinnatl, Ohio. P. ft (let BruiHwicVs Improved Patent Gemluaaffo Cuthion. marlU.'tiO'dOm NlMC-ellaneous. " ' : EVE AND EAR. Special attention given to dieeasesof the Eye and Er, ...roiMtl ana medical. H. i. G'll, M. 47, East State St., Oo'umbus, 0. D., Occulist, No. niaylB.atnu FOR SECRET FOR BFVRET FOR HECItET FOR 8EVRET PHOTOGRAPHS. M Witt, four door, north or th. American Hotel, over RudisiU's Uat Store, make, life-sited Photographs, col-ored in Oil and Pastell, as well as Daguerreotypes, Am brotypea, and all kinds or Sua raintiugs. uiy2,'tS0-dly.s. s ' J. C. WOODS. Broad street, Columbus, O., Ageut for Chlckerlng & Son,. Piano Forte., Mason t Hamlin's Melodeonss, and dealer in Sheet Music aud musical merchandise. apa'HO-dly-K.A.B. - S. B. H ANNUM, Attorney at Law, Notary Public and Commissioner of Deeds. Denosltions. Ac., fT the States of Csltfnrnla, . Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Indiana, '. Michigan, Missouri, Wisconsin and Nebraska Territory. Office No. 6 "Johnson Building," High street, Columbus, Ohio. Devote, special attention to making Collections and taking Depositions. Refer by permission to John D. Martin, Ksq., Hanker, Lancaster, O.i Messrs. Swayna Baber, Columbus. O.; Messrs. Cipperly, Hoover A Go , Citv ot New York; Chauucey N. Olds, Esq., Columbus, Ohio. mar!W-dtaug9'00 JAMES S. AUSTIN, attorney at Law and Notary Public, Oolumbu., Ohio. omca, Room no. i in roet vraoe ouii'iing, un ow.pbi. Special attention given to foreign collection.. docl2dly WMrDKNNISOw"rHrBrCARRINGTON, Attorney, and Counsellors at Law, Oolumbu., 0. Office, No.. 1 and 9 Odeon Building. Special attention ri'en to tha Law of Patent, and Insurance. apr22'G0dly-ia SEWISG MACHINE WORK, NO. 218 EAST FRIEND ST. tr n ni.luu. will, iwn Tears exiMiriencn upon Wheeler & WHson's Machine, Is prepared to do all kinds of sew. ing and stitching on the moat reasonable tonus. Please givo her a cull. May 8, I860. d3mE.A.B. Great Inducement to Traveler. TMIRMIIIill TRUNK MANUFACTORY! r uiviitl Tt tt ATT. No II Weat State etreet, oppo- l alto th. Amoriran Hotel, f'olnmhns, Ohio, Manufactuer. and dealers iu all kinds of Trunks, Valises, Carpet Bags, c , Ac. We have on hand ann mane looroor nieo, r..,... Sole Leather Trunks, Ladles' Dress Trunks, Bunret Box-es Ac ,a'l of which hio warranted to equal any that can be honirht East or west, ann at prices io mi, .o na.n....i.in. ,1n,iwilh neatness and dislKltch. Oive us a call before you purchase elsewhere, and judge for yourself.'., mayio.im-na NATIONAL HOTEL. I. B. BAKER, - - - - l'ROPRIETOR. 3NTo. S3VI3 Ilielx St., COLU.UDl'S, OHIO. fiitnsted near the Depot, and convenient to the bnsines. part or town. Can and sea us. rnce per oaj , ar.r6 dV.m-E A B WESTERN HOTEL. 1.. O. EDSOV, PEOPHIBTOB, GALION, - - - - - - - OHIO Ju25-dS Yale and Oxford Neck Ties. A NEW ASSORTMENT OP THESE fuhli.nable Ties, also Marseilles and Lilian Tie. in great variety, aud much below usual prices, at i30 First door north of Nell House, ASD DELICATE VllUtillt.KH. AND DELICATE DISORDERS. AND DELICATE DISORDERS. Aiun DELICATE DISORDERS. a . and Kneel flo Remedy a PoeMI-re and Speelno Remedy A Poaltlwa and Speolflo Remedy A Poattlva and Specific Remedy A Positive and Specific Remedy A Poaltlve and Specific Remedy FOR DISEASES OF THE BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNErS, DROPSr. BLADDER. GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY BLADDER. GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, MOPST, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL. K I DN FYS DROPSY, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, OROA NIC WEAKNESS, ORGAN 1C WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, And all diseases of the Sexual Oraaxt, And all Dueata of the Sexual Organs, And all DUeamt of the Sexual Orjoos, And all Duea of Ihe Sexual Organt, And all Dueaut of the Sexnal f(r,;naj, And all Dueatm of the Sexual Orgam, AKISINO FROM Exeewes, Kxpcnrea, and I",PC" " K' Kxces.es Exposure., and Imi"uJ'" HJ?' sLuaaa.aai mwA imnrndenc'iri ID EjIIO Ex"; Expire.; a. d .J-le. U Life, Kxceeaea, ii.xpo.urc, " ;r"z--;- i . lr Excesses, Exposure., and Imprudencle. In Lire, - . nrf.in.nnr. and whether .listing In mm -D .11 V K SI Fsmales, tak. no more Pilla ! They are of no avail for Complaints Incident to tho eex. I'se Extract Bnchn. Helmbold'. Extract Bucho la a Medicine which la per-fcctly pleaaant In it. But ImmadlaU In it. action, giving Health and Vigor to the Frame, Bloom to the Pallid Cheek, and rctorlng th. patient to ajerfect state o. priRiTY, Helmbold'. rxtract Buchn i. prepared according to Phannarr and Chemistrv, and Is prescrioea ana uses j pnTfHB MOST EMINENT PHYSICIANS. . Delay no longer. Procure the remedy at once. Fries SI per bottle, or six for J5. Depot 104 South Tenth .treet, Philadelphia. ,....iT,lrif YJaalera Trying to palm off their own or other article, of B0OHTJ ea the renutation attained by ..BTt HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHtJ, Tha Original and only Genuine, W. desire to run on the MERIT OF OTJB ARTICLE I Their', is worthleee I. .old at much lee. rate, and com-missions, consequently paying a much lietter proflt. WI DEFY COMPETITION 1 Ask for Uelmbold's Extract Buchu. Tain no other. n.i I A In I- if Swh wnM. M BOBEBTS SAMUEL, Agenta, aerST-dly Columbus, Ohio. A legal gentleman in Chicago, formerly of South Reading, a Douglas Democrat, is of opinion that "the next President will be either Abraham Lincoln or Joe Lane." He then proceeds, as follows: 'Linooln vf ill either he elected by the people, or Lane will be elected Vioe President by the Senate, and the House baing uoable tp.elect a President on the fourth of M"c".'ruridge and Lane will carry afi the' South whioh does not go for Bell and Everett. I very much doubt Douglas' being able to cirry Illinois or Indiana, as matters now look. One hundred and four eititens of Hannibal, Missanri, 'believing that the sucoess or tue jrinoiples of the Bepublioan party is necessary to the well being of the country, have united in a letter to Frank Blair to come and make thetn a Republican speech. The Omaha Nebraskian is a philosophio sheet It apologizes for, or rather explains, the absence nf a nresidential ticket from the head of its columns, by saying that it has a preferonoe for both ciiDiliUaiea OI tne uemoorano usrij uui that, inasmuch as Nebraska has no vote, it is fnllv ta keeD alive the intestine broil for naught, Therefore, it recommends to all good democrats to keep qutet and pray lor tne rignt. Aa Iowa correspondent of the Chioago Prcie and Tribune writes : Donglas' boast of what non-intervention has done for slavery ana tne ooutn, coupieu wuu Maniamin's exDose in the Sonate, of the secret understanding of Demoorata in 1851, that each winir of tha eartv should advoeate their partic ular theory of the Kansas-Nebraska bill, and the doctrine therein contained, and pledging themselves to abide tho decision of the SupremeCourt on the question f Blavery iu the Territories, are facts tkat tell with honest minds. Republicanism is gaining ground in this oounty, as also everywhere iu the State. Death of a Rshakabl Womah. The wife of Mr. Caleb Brinton, residing on Ualdetnan s farm, opposite this city, died on Monday, and was intorred in Mount Kalma Cemetery yesterday afternoon. This woman was probably the largest woman in the United States. We did not learn what her weight was, but it may be judged when we state that she measured seven feet six inches around the waist I For the last two or three years she has been unable to move, from excessive obesitv. and yet enjoyed more than ordinary good health. llanieburg (Po.) Patriot. A DOQ 0VB NlAOAH A FALLS WITHOUT IltJUET The truth of such stories as have been told (without reoeiving muoboredenoe)of dogs going over the Falls and surviving the passage, was tested the other day, according to the magara Falls Gazette, and fairly established. The Ga zette ears : John, the drayman, (who, by the by, must be a naraueartea eussj tursw un uug mtu iuv , p- ids near Goat Island Bridge, and immediately afterwards went to the foot of the ferry stairs and found biro but little injured by the tremen dous leap. The experiment was tried to con. vines some incredulous persons. A ourious divorce case in the Gallia county Common Fleas Court, is thus related by the Gallipolis Neat: A resDeetable couple of this county were mar ried last fall; the young mau look bis bride to his father's to live till a house could be built. After a residence of some weeks, the husband, (who was very young) became dissatisfied with i h nmaneet. which is said to east shadows be fore, and finally the sudden illness and changed annearanno of the wife, caused considerable un easiness in the family, and espeoially on the r,art nf tha husband. Suspicions were aroused, and searoh made by the family and neighbors which proved successful in the dtsoovery of a new-born child, which had been buried in a ra-vlna anma distance from the house, which, when exhumed, was examined by the jury, who did nnt aeiminate anv one. Th. veanll. of the trial upon ine application was that a divorce was granted, notwithstanding there seems to be a mystery hanging over the whole case. Who dodged the vote on the Homestead bill? Stephen A. Douglas. Who dodged en the admission of Kansas? . Stephen A. Douglas. Who claims that "my great principle," popular sov. ereienty, bas given to slavery a degree and a half mora of the public domain than the slave power claimed? Stephen A. Douglas. Isn't he a pretty candidate for the votes of free labor ing eo f i The Chicago Times having claimed that Lin coln will not, and that Douglas will, carry New York in November next, a correspondent of the Press and Tribune offers the conductor of the Times or any other persons the following wager: I will bet $100 that the Douglas electors will not receive the plurality of the popular vote of New York. $100 that the Lincoln elector will. $100, that the latter will carry the State by a nluralitv rote of 6,000. r in oiiii .... $100, that, they will carry u oy a piuia". vote of 16,000 $100, that they will carry New York by a plurality vote of 20,000. $100. that they will oarry New York by a plurality vote of 30,000. These bet to be taken together. The Last Survivor ot Banker Hill. Th statement ha frequently been made by the newspapers, and endorsed by Mr. Everett hi. lata Knnrtk of Julr oration, that there is . . loft nf that band of heroes who first w.iheiond tha shock of British arms in the open fi.M Eio-htv-nve Tears having elapsed sinoe that world-renowned struggle, the burden of probabilities would favor suob a conclusion; yet h atatemont is not correct. There i one who took part in that memorable Battle, ana suose-qent event of the revolution, yet living "full of Roman Newspapers. Nothing bring a North American In Rome more in contract with our eonntry than th newspaper or rather the no-newepaptrs. The prinoipal newspaper indeed the only on I saw published-in Rome, was the Roman Journal, the official Gasette. It if published .daily, except on hcliday about four time a week. It is a small folio sheet about twelve by sixteen inches ha no editorial matter, Almost no advertisements, and is entirely made op of clipping from th foreign newspaper not, however, including our. never saw in it any mention whatever ef onr country. Our Republican, Protestant country appears to be entirely ignored in the papal oity. And I do not remember hearing the question asked. "What is the new?" And strange as it may seem to an Amerioan, this way of the whole community minding their own business at least, not minding thoir neighbor' business, nor troubling themselevs much about the rest of the world, is very well for a change. It ha ils good side, and it agreeable side, too. It almost make one ask himself, i it, after all, quite certain that such an infinite gabble of newspaper as we have pri ing into everything, blurting out everything, gossiping about everything, blundering to-day and correcting it to morrow is a real gospel dispensation? When exeess is the worst? I am, however quite sure that no amount of fire and fagota, and holy inquisitions, could aver make us believe that the strict censorship of the press which exists here is any better than taewildest lioense which we ever have in America. The mean between the two is, of eoaree, the happy and golden mean and the newspaper is like everything else earthly, there must be a taste of imperfection in it the power to do good must bring with it the power to do evil. We do not look at a Roman newspaper any more, it is so absolutely worthless to us but I preserve to take with me to New York, a file of one week' paper of the offioial pontifioial gaieete. I may live to see a regular American newspaper published in the oity of Rome, when it will be interesting to compare the two. Oh, if I could only be certain of living longenoagh to make the oomparision I Th babe is still unborn whioh ehall see the beginning of such reform. The shook which the revolution of 1848-'49 gave to Pious IX, who reallyhad some thought of improvement, has extinguished all hope of a melioration through the Churoh. The New York Mercury has a series of bur lesque "Biographies of the Candidates," from whioh we extraot the following interesting information conoeruing Mr. Douglas: Mr. Douglas was born at Bennington, Vt., on Ihe Fourth of July, 1770, and demonstrated the utility of Squatter Sovereignty before he threw off hisrinoline. His parent belonged to a noble Sootch family, and when Stephen wa two year old they emigrated with him to Illinois. It wa during thi journey he gave vent to a remark which ha since become olassical. Hi father asked him if he would have aa apple, and on reoeiving an answer in the affirmative, mad a "split in it preparatory lo dividing it into two pieces when Mr. Douglas suddenly grasped the whole, exclaiming 'The Union must and .hall be preserved." This immortal sonleno wa immediately telegraphed to all the paper in the United State and Canada, and prooured the election of Mr. Douglas to the office of Judge of good whiskey, a soon as he arrived in Illinois. When about ten years old he commenced writing for Harper' Maa-asine. and finally contributed a series of humorous article to th editorial column of the Chioago Times. By way of oonoluding our biography, we give the following extraot from one or Mr. Douglas' most eloauent speeches: nr another man.'acooro'eilW the CifimUwRBtt', but the right of another man over thi man, or that man over this man, wr. mau is w,...uB that man should be his own man, inaepenaeni of every other man. This gentlemen, is squatter . a . . l II rl. atn. sovereignty wttnoni muigauuu. iuio u-thusissm. ' Tne Carnage at tha Battle of tha .a,te Kranco-Austrlan War. New York Times matter in nearly th same state the amount of revenue collected at that point being $164.76, against $8065.83 expended for the service of collecting and for keeping, the funds of the ' Government in a suitable manner. In Washington Territory we fimd a larger amount collected, inasmneh a there i s greater number of foreign vessel entered in thai dislriot than at any in this 8tat. Th total amount of receipt at Port Towaiend during three years ending June, 1850, wa $19,441.07, and the expense for th same period amounted to $51,607.05, leavins: (a balance against th United State of $32,966.88. Portland ( Oregon) Advertiser. . . A l.IO.-8AVER'S RECORD.' Edward Everett's View ana RlaTerr. n.nt years," and venerated for hi moral worth as as well as for his age and publio servioes. In the town of Acton, Me., on a beautiful ridge of land situated about a mile from Milton Mills, N. H., stand a oottage farm house, unpretending in it appearance and bearing evidence of a very respectable antiquity. Thepasser-by will often notice a gray-haired man, raariino- attentively by the window, or walking with a single cane peronance eugagsum me ordinary labors of the nneoanaman. xae .iranier will perceive nothing very remarkable . . . . . i i . a , 11 in tha tklcK-sel. Bllitnur-ueus uini ouu won- nreaerved. warthy feature of thi old man of apparently eighty years; but the residents of the adjacent country invoiuaianij ueuu wim reverenoe a they pass him. And well they may he is the last of the Bunker lliu patn. nta David Kinnison, who long survived hi con federate of the famous Boston lea Tarty, was living in 1861, ia Chicago, at the extraordinary age of one hundred anu ntteen year, ne nas passed away. Ralph Farnum, the last of the Uunker mil neroes, suit uvea, aiiuuugu un. nearly attained a span and a half of the ipaoe allotted lo man. His on hundred and fourth birthday was celebrated at Milton Mills en the 7th. We have already given, from the pen ef a correspondent, ome notioe of this interesting affair. Although no pains wer taken to extend a notice of the event beyond the immediate vicinity of the veteran' residence, a very large concourse of people were in attendance. The features of the occassioa were an address, and one hundred and four greetings frem a twelve pounder, and a dinner enlivened with toasts aad speeches. Mr. Farnum, we learn, was not in the midst of the battle. Having been enrolled only on the day previous, it wa hi lot to be detailed among a guard to take sharge of artillery and hairiaio. at some distance front the redoubt. In so close a proximity to the prinoipal scene of strife, the observations which be mace, ana ais- linotlv reoolleots to this day, are highly inter esting, and we trost they will beeivea to the publio by some competent pen. When we reflect how few net-son living ean even remember the event itself as a child of twelve at that lime would now be ninety-five year old aliviag actor in that bloody drama become at enoe aa obieot of interest, respect and veneration. Boston Journal July Wih. Heart Is Power. A man's force in the world, other things being eqna), is just in the ratio of the force and strength of his heart. A full-breasted man is always powerful man; if he is erroneous, then be is cowerful for error: if the thing 1 in hi heart, he ia, sure to make it notorious, even though it it ia a downriirht falsehood. Let a man be ever su ignorant, still if hi heart be full of love for the cause, he become a powerful man for that object, because be has heart-power heart-foroe. A man may be deBoient in many of the advantages of education, in many ef those niceilies whioh . are so muck looked upon in society; but once give him a strong heart, that beata hard, and there is no mistake about his power. Let him have a heart that is right full up lo the brim with an object, and that man will do the thing, or else he will die gloriously defeated, and wiU glory in bis defeat.Spur-jeon. A correspondent of the write in a lato letter ' It has already been ahowa by a dooumant published at Brescia by the chief Italian surgeon of the place, that theaccidetrt at Solferino on the allied aide, which entered for treatment at tha hoanital of Brescie alone, wer a little over 81,000; if to thi be added the men who entered the hospital ot otner towns aim - l thnaa who had wounds wmcn urn not drive them into the hospitals (and the hospitals An ..pnitnt nf the intense heat were avoided by every one who could nurse has wound in camp,) and tha lifinrt lult on tne neiu. wa nrrivo mo.i- la'ily a t figure approximating 45,000 or about nne-fnmih of the entire army, not more than fi.;M. nf which were engaged. lr. liertue- r.nd nna of the Drincinal surgeons of the Frannh army. Director of the Medioal Bohool at Algiers, and chief surgeon to one of the corps a" armct in the late Italian campaign, ha just published a small work of 200 pages on the surgical service of the campaign. t n,ir tie Keriheand states that the air.tiea fnena of the Freuoh army in Italy had reached, on the day of the battle of Solferiuo, 218,000 men, and he gives the same figures as th Bresoia surgeon, as the number of wounded who entered the hospital of that town afterward, "Nfor than 17.000 Freneh. 18,000, Ital ians, and about 1,600 Austrian total, oo," , men." He further says, "that from the 6th of June to the 17th of August, a period which comprised the evaouat ions from Msgenta, Ma-legnano and Solferino, Ihe hospitals of Milan reoeived in round numbers, 21,000 French 6,000 Italians, and 7,000 Austrians total, 84,-000." These figures embrace also those attack ed with any serious disorder, sucn lor example a typhoid fever, Out tne army was rem., k..iih. rlnrlnir the whole campaign, and every man not attacked with an absolutely grave disorder, was treated outside; so that the entries r-nm thia eanaa were lnBieiiiufci".. ut .ill .h..rB in rerard to the statistics at Milan, that while all, or nearly all, of the wounded of Magenta and Malegnano wereonrneu is.ic, .,u a certain proportion of these from Solferino are comprised in the number. As a last observa tion, the officers ana very muj v. .... who hod friends in the country, wsre treated ia private houses The following fact will doubtless excite a thrill of astonishment throughout the country, '' and may possibly render it necessary to call another National Convention of th Union-Saver : ,, It seems that in 1887 the following resolve were adopted by the Massachusetts Legislature:Resolved, That Congress has, by th Constitution, power to abolish slavery and the slave trade in the District of Columbia, and that there is nothing in the terms and vircumstaaoe of the act s -of cession by Virginia and Maryland, or otherwise, enforcing any legal or moral restraint on it exeroiie. , Resolved, That Congress ought to take measure to effect the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia. , Resolved, That the rights of humanity, tha-claim of justice and the Common good alike demand the suppression by Congress of lha slav trad carried on ia and through the District.Resolved, That Congress has, by thi Constitution, power to abolish slavery in th Territories of the United States. Resolved, That no new State should hereafter be admitted into the Union, whose constitution of government shall permit the existence of domestic slavery therein. Resolved, That Congress has, by Ihe Constitution, power to abolish the traffic in slave between the different States of the Union. Resolved, That the exorcise of this power i demanded by the principles of humanity and justice. . ' i ' la 1839 the Hen. Nathaniel Borden, of Massachusetts, propounded to Mr. Everett the following interrogatories: ' ' 1st. Are you in favor of the immediate abolition, by law, of Slavery in the Distrust of Co lumbia, and of the slave traffio between tho States of the Union? 2d. Are you opposed to the admission into the Union of any new State, the Constitution of whioh tolerates domestio slavery? The following is Mr. Everett' reply: Washington, D. C, Oot. 24, 1839. Dear Sib : On Saturday last, I only received your letter of the 18tb, propounding to me certain interrogatories, and earnestly requesting an answer. You are aware that aoveral resolves on the subject of these inquiries, and their kindred topic, aeeompenied by a very able report, wer introduced into the Senate of the Commonwealth year before last by a joint committee of tb houses, of which the late lamented Mr. Alvoro was Chairman. These resolve, after having been somewhat enlarged by amendment, were adopted by the Legislature. They appear to cover the whole ground of your two interrogatories. Having respectfully co-operated in tht eiful report of the Chairman of the Committee, J reepond to your inquiries in the affirmative. . Th first of the subjects embraoed In you inquiry i the only one of them which came before Congress while I was a member. . I voted in tha negative on the motion to lay apon the table tho petition of the Amerioan Anti-Slavery Society for the abolition of elavery in the District of Columbia, and other motions of like character iutroduced to stave off the consideration of thi class of petition. " ! '- ' ' ' t - . . I am, Dear 8ir, very reepeotfully, ' . . Your friend and servant, ' , EDWARD EVERETT. . To Nathaniel Borden. ... These little remniscences have been revived1 by the Richmond Enquirer, muoh to the grief of the "Union-loving" supporters of theBell-Everett ticket in Virginia. ' ', ' Curloaltlea of th Revenue. . ft mav not be uninteresting to anow the .n,..m of income and expenditure in the sever .1 ..iLriln districts on the Pacifio ooast, and ,t,.rfor insert the figure, a copied from Ihe report of the Seoretary of the Traury At Astoria tn revenue iur in. ii jm embraced in the report was aa follows: $4173,64 in 1857, $8767,73 ia 1858, and $3921.71 in 1859; whilst the expenses inourred in the tame diatriot during the Bams period wa $21,254 61 iu 1857, $12 187 73 in 1858, and $3413,13 in 1859, being nearly twenty thousand dollars more than the income for the same period of timel Of course the "proper officer" has vouches and receipts for this vast expenditure, but no doubt it would prove an interesting task to discover the multi-tudious channels through which the fund is appropriated. ' - ' At Gardiner, in Uubqua County, there stands an unfinished frame shanty which, during the high water, bas to be approached in canoes, and this superstructure is known as the Custom Home, from whence, in three yean, ha been paid out the modest sura of $19,449 61! The Collector at that port has been very busy ia his official capacity, for we find he has collected, as revealed in the same period, no less a srtra than $58.32! leaving only $19,891.30 a a balanea for clerk hire, tationary, repair of "Custom House," and all the multifarious expenses incidental to keeping up a large establishment in the entrenol to the Umbqua valley. If we step down to Port Oxford w shall find A Q,uaker'a Cad ot Honor. i . . A gentleman of the broad-brim persuasion, after selling his "truck" in market, yesterday morning, stopped inth tor of a friend for an hour' rest before leaving for bis home, com thirty mile distant, and during his slay' entertained a number of bis oity acquaintences with a spicy fund of anecdotes and a rare budget of sensible talk. He avowed hi code of honor and of moral conduct somewhat in thi wise: If a man cheat the once, sham on him; if b cheat thee twice, shame on thee. If a man deceive thee trust him not again, if he insults thee go away from him; irhe strike thee, thrash him like smoke. If thee have lost thy eredit, be in-dustriou and thee will gain it. If thee have lost thy property be industrious,, bonest and frugal, and thee will acquire more. If thee have a wife, take eare of her; and if thee have not, get one immediately! Petersburg Express, 13M. ThePrlne of Wales Who and what be I. It may Interest onr readers to know what the numerous title of the youngPrinceof Walesare, and we therefore quote them in detail from the laat edition of British Peerage: ' "The Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornwall. The most high, puissant and illustrous Prince Albert Edward, Prince of the United Kingdom of Great Britaia and Ireland, Princeof Wales, Duke of Saxony, Prince of Coburg and Gotha, great Steward of Scotland; Duke of Cornwall and Kothsay; Earl of Chester, Carrick and Dublin; Baron of Renfrew; Lord of the Isles, K. G, and a colonel in the Army." He will be nineteen years of age on the 9th or November next. On the 4th of December, 1841, when he was not yet a month old, he was oreat-ed, by Patient, under the Great Seal, Prince of Wale and Earl of Chester. The titles of Great Steward of Scotland, Duke of Rothsay, Earl of Carriok, Baron of Renfrew, and Lord of th Isles, were, by act of Parliament, in 1849, vested in the eldest son and heir apparent of the throne of Sootland forever. The titles Earl of Chester and Duke of Cornwall, belong to mm oy euu earlier Patents, and the remaining title Earl of Dublin wa granUd to him by the Queen in 1849- ' A Rett of the Pioneer Day. Dr. Minor, of this place, ha in hi possession a copper coin which was picked up a few days since, near the site of old Fort St. Clair. The coin was crusted over with rust, and required a vigorou application of nitrio acid to render the letter upon it legible. On the obverse side of the piece is an emblem of industry, surrounding which are the words, ".A or Cecsarea," with the date of coinage "1786." On the reverse sidei th motto, "EPluribu Cnutn, encircling the Amerioan slleld or coat of arm. This coin was doubtless dropped by a soldier or follower of the army of Wayne or St. Clair, in the day when the "reveille drum"-at the old Fortawoke the echoes of the forest now known a "Bruce'a Woods.'; It ia a rare coin indeed, it is the first of the kind we have ever seen; and being found in that locality renders it a valued relic Eaton (O.) Register. " ' . i The Marion Mirror (Douglas) console iUelf for the Piqna Enauirer hauling down the Douglas flag and hoisting that of Lincoln, by Baying "Thi is just a it ahould bo." Just so. : -

r ,,,, VOLUME XXIV. COLUMBUS. OHIO. SATURDAY MORNING. JULY. 21. 1S60. NUMBER 70. (Ohio tatr nmuin DAILT. TRI-WF.KKI.Y AND WIEKLT, BT COOKR, HURTT CO. OOcli Miller'. BuiMlBf. No. Ill Jest Town.traaf. term Invarutbly in Advance. Dam - - lOOOP"-"' .. ' By the Carrier, per week, - .... fS""'. " . - ......tmn n THE RAIliR. EKBIH OF IIMHI " - , -. . . i nv, J2" On. aquar. I weee, .S .Sooths, 18 00 On. IwA., J 0; On. On. On. On 00 1 wnk, 1 ' Idaye, 100 id.;., " 1 day. IXV1SIA.I.T I AD- Jt.ro C months 16 "0 I On. 8 months, 1" 0" I On 1 month., OS On. 1 month. 5 0 On mr For niarrlag. nolle. 23 oenU A"C' WKKKLT ADVEBTI8IN0 P.r Square, on. insertion "laplayed Adferti.om.nU hlf more than th. above "Adrertlaement. leaned and placed In th. column of Ba Hal Notleee, itmbl tkt oriimtuv rati. All notice require to be published by taw, 'J If ordered on th. Inside exclusively alter th. Br. . eek. SO par cent, more than th. ahov. rates; bat all inch will atiiear In th. Tri-Weekly without cherRa. ' S..., Card., not .xceHllng Br. lines, per year, ln.ld., ,1ffiUo;lm,ng.,chari..hl..oc.M1.nr.comP.n.. AUMAdi. mu.t fcaU i- ainno. Thl. rale will not be varied from. .No Advertisement taken .cot for a dellnlta period. Columbus business directory. IlarberH. w M. CtlTT BAHUKIl, Would notlly hi. numerous friend, and customers that he ha. returned, and will bereafwi- be found at 1his old .land under Bartllt A Smith'. Dank, UlSu solicit, a return ol hit old cu.tom.-r.. , 0"" Clottilng. J. OOOIJMAN V BON, Dealer. In Beady and Custom-made Clothlnir, flent'ii Fur-nt.l Goods! Hat.. Cap.. Trunk., V". 1 South High St.. corner of Broad. ni)2, W-fliy A m w otl MSWill. ADAM. ,T,,y.WART A, STIMSOM, Merchant Tailor., No. 138 Btrmt, opposite Ooilale House, Columbus. Ohio, deal in be.t grade "J''1'' rWn are. and Vestlnirs. Kmploy none but good work-nC! ln.r'." oi nts; do not disappoint in time; ch. re fair prices, and require prompt pay. aprl3,'i-aprtioclly f,roccrn. Wholesale and Betall'Dealer I" O' and Produc. Koutheast corner of Town and Fourth sts., tol"'"1"' Particular attention paid to Consignment V'"'li A B COLUMBUS BUSINESS DIRECTORY. AlturiicyN. P. R. AND J. A. WILCOX ! Attoralee at Law; coraar of High and Broad .treet.. P. B. Wilcox giro, particular attention o preparing written Opinion, and ArgumauU upon Questions ol Law. my:)-d&in-s A F. A. B. 8IMKISH, Attorney at Law and Notary Public. Offloa No. t Odeon Hall, oppoalta the Bl.ta Honas, Culumbua, Ohio. mrtl-'i-dlT MISCELLANEOUS. Greelcj '8 Elastic Hack and Centre SUSPENSION PANTS. THIE aiGIIT TO MAKES PANTS WITH thl. lmin,Tment ha. been oMalned of the Patentee B. J. UKKKLKY, It th. .uliacriber., who al.j bar. for .ale, and expect to keep on hand, GREELEY'S CELEBRATED BRACE SUSPENDERS, alike diirable for Gentlemen, Ladle., Boyi and Miea. Theee Brace Su.peilder. are .aid 10 excel all other, for eaM, duralillily and cheapne... being a gentle brace for the .hoiiUer.. aud at the .am. tlmo a molt pleaaant iup. port for the Paul, or Skirt.. BTEWAKT 5c BTIMSON, . Merchant Tailors, 138 S. High St., Colnmbul. aprl3,'60-dly.aprviUo TREMONT HOUSE, 2VX aHaillon, Ohio, J. PENOYEIt - - PROPRIETOR. CllAKOES REASONABLE. Jyiol.lm. for, Produce. Confectionery. O. H. L.ATIMK11, No. tM South High ... belween Bich and FH.nd Jjr. Nuu, and Famhy Qroceriua; UOi wnaioB nu broiderw Mournlnn HnnlkMel..efs. Hmlmd, Kiviurtv n r.tinarUa " l Mu.e. n..mi., K1....V1 Iioots, Shoes and lirogans! At WhoUialt by the Que or Dozen, by JACOB BURNET, JR., No. tt Pearl St., between Vine afc ITace, Oincinxiati, O. AFULl ASSORTMENT OP BOOTS, Shoe, and llrogan.i eiecially adapted to the Welern Retail Trade, alwitvn on hand. Caeh and prompt time buyer, will find good, of tha be.t quality, at the lowest market price.. Canh buyer, are particularly Invited to examine the utork. a. H'clal Inducement, will beiflored to thoae who buv "('anh in hand." Particular attention will bo given to Riling ca.h order YOUTH'S, MIMSKS AND CHILDREN'S "TIPPED 0001)8" ALWAYS ON HAND. luiarlO-'uO-dOmK.A B Oonfectioneriu. ItankM. BARTLlf SMITH, ' . . . . . v i m r.nln. Ana nncnrreui Banker, ami ; " ,, ,tie. in the W SU. AoTBuildln. Nc, 7 South ,.Jgh .treet. , - Real Point Iace Collars. MALTKSB LACE COLL AH IN NEW hapen, llnmlton I, nee 'ollare. Linen and Pique Traveling Seta, Frilled Mn.lin Seta, Mil.lln Collar., new .hanu, Knibroldereil Trlniminga, Valenclenne. and Thread l.ace.. I.ace l.iine. rill. APItie, liemnieu, ouicni'ii, r.m. ing, Magic Ruining Mccvo BIotiiIn and Mu.lin., and all kind, of Lace and Kinbroidered Muslin (iooil. in the great. TETER BAIN, First door north of Neil House. est variety, Just opelied. Juno Coal, &c. n. K. CHAMPION, h?&s South Third Street, nearly oppo.lt. Steam Fire . Hon.e. nolumbn..Ohlo. n"ir'"""-t- II I. WIATT St. BHO., Keep constantly on hand a choice .npply of Confection., Cigar, and Pure Liquor. ISO TOWS STREET, UOLVMRVS, OHIO. Order, promptly filled. We doal cheap for cash. Glr. t call. iny4.d:!m-s a a Manufactures. CLEVBLANDBBU8H COMPANY, Manufacturer, of all kind,, of Br.... , JWriBrn.he.,87 Str- 1""hl r'e-hand maAeioorder: I C. Pendleton, w,. ... novl8'fu.diy IT". Harris. House, Sign and Carriage Painter, OnwiHitu Jnhn h. Htlrt H ire-room,) HIUII 8THKET, COLUMBUS, OHIO ap3U-d.lm-E A H. Watcu,Jewelryi D. DC Ml A 11, Watch Maker'and EngAv. ha. for .tree", one dK.r .outh of Goodale Uoum. anr28,'fiO-dly ;a KOCKEY, BROTHER & TWIGO, manufaturr. or S.UrERIOK WOOD PUMPS, No. 2'lfi East Friend streets, Columbus, Ohio. Order, from abroad promptly filled by sending depth of Til. MilTer.Tlcmbors oTXUjf 'S&JtlK Mey 7,1800. dlim E. A. B. Hardware. ko.geuk co., miPmw .ale and Bet.il Ir. er. u, . Qonn r,irm. Cutlery, non-e" - and Willow Ware, Cor- . rgejwrrTw; . " r" nooU Binding. . Wnder and Blank Book Manufacturer, High Street, X.,c BIost TllOrOIISjIl anil Practical "t'wee";Mfand"Gay Street., Oolumbu., 0. MERCANTILE INSTITUTE IN THE WEST. f RADUATES ARE COMPETENT TO KEEP THE 1 1 book, of any business house in the country, by Ponble Commercial &Ma11icmalical Colleges OONBOLID ATEP I AT COLUMHUS, 0., DEOEMufclv 1st, 1HSU, between I mavH'fiO-dlyJ A R. nhirv of from 8600 to SslK) per annum a full ... nnllmiipd course is nivt-n in all the dewrt' 1 nun1 IIM I fown stroet., Colnmlius, O. Hoots and ShoeN. HAVLDEN &. CO., . ,. nnl,.ln T .illi Entry, and earn i mania in our Columbus, 0., I'lttsburgh, Ta., aud .1ul..l.ta V . rutlfireN. v..r Tuitlrxi. K4H. navable in advance. Student, re view at pleasure. No vacation. Time, from B to 9 week. Total cost, about $75. For lull particulars, aiiuivss AIcCOY A CO., fel,Kt.'nnilAi1 flnliimhus. O. Boeeeer toW.L. Mercer, Dealer In Ladir, and Children bt Columbus. " A. C. BBTHBE iw. .nd Shoe maker. French Boot, and Shoe, made to order. Rubla-r Boot, and f hoe. "ew-."cd repa.r, E I r ' " No. 37 N:.iighH,lu,ubu.01 ' " " REMOVAL, Dotl. A Co., Manufacturer, and Wholejal. Boot, and Shoe., have removed to No. 61 Odeon buiiu inl High StTopposite the State House, and keep on h.ml. large "Vock of Fine and Staple Good., to.which they invite th. attention of MerchauU and Dealer.. Ieh7n) . ; BILLIARD TABLES. V Pvv 1XX s ti 1It fcii n. M v. " OOMS IN AMROS HALL, HIGH STREET.-TKETH . i..ii In a Kientiflc mannor.and Set. fur- .h.d that are warranted to please. novlrr? R' -r; improved Billiard Tables and COMBINATION CU5I11UJNS, Protected by Itttert patent dated Feb. 19, 1856 Oct. 28, 1850; Dec. 8, 1857; Jan. 12, 18u8; JV'oo. 16, 1858, and March 20, 1859. ' BSB-The recent improvements in these tables make them unsurpassed in the world. They are now offered to the scientific Billiard players Rf oombining .peed with truth. never before obtained In any Rllllnrd Table. Manufactory No.. 65, 07, aud (19 Crosby Strcot. I'UELAN A COLLENDER, HOTELS NOltTII AMERICAN HOTEL, 80UTII WEST CORNER OF THE ' PARK MANSFIELD, OHIO. ,'a TOWNLEY - - Proprietor. Formerly of Man.flelU Jowtion Dining Room. ny21-d3inJMB EAGHiH IXOTEIj, OAMDRIDGE, OHIO. JAMES VIRTUE, : : Proprietor. myMdam-i a PR. .Hor.niKOa. b. aow. SUoodlnKor ct Drown, Munufactitrer. and Dealer. In all kinds of CABINET FURNITURE, Spring Beds, Chairs, Mattrasses, Looking Glasses, Ac. 104 Sua KUh Sererf, folumtmt, 0to. VUndertaking promptly attended to. n)4 dly-iA. cabin-et-wabe1 I JOILV )mruuivg, S NO. 1TT EAST FRIEND STREET, HAH A FULL ASSORTMENT or ALL KINDS OT Plain. Kancy and Ornamental Karnlture. Mann. acturea Furniture to order t'HEAl'ER than any other., tabllshment in the city. Ti. present stock to be sold positively at rest. . . l i'uui,&i aiiiiiiaoneiu a superior manner, lanl-dly Xlxoliaugo XZotel, OPPOSITE GREAT UNION DEPOT, AND KHAR Cnlumbul ex Plqua R. IT. Depot, C0LVMBV8, OHIO. Charge, per Day, - - 11.00. WILLIAM POWELL, pr:in-d:lm E.A.D. Proprietor. M'Vat II. M. Roosh STAOBY HOUSE, Opposite the Court House, ZANE3VILL, OHIO. inayltldum cab JI'VAY A ROL'SH, Proprietor.. II. Moores, Carriage Manufacturer, Coraer 'Diird and Rich ttret. RETURNS HIS THANKS FOR PAST favors, and solicit, a continuance of the same. Per seus wishing to purchase are requested to call and exam Ine my stock and prices. Particular attention given to repairing. The attention or customers is Invited to my Patent rlpring handy .Wagons tad Buggies. All work warranted. H. MOORES. pr21-dly. Columbus, Ohio. Joliu. Uonto tta Mauufucturar. of Go. Hanllla, Cotton, Tarred and Hemp Hope, Cotton and Hemp Packing, Cords, I. Ine. and Twine, lu all their variety, and dealer, iu Oakuro, Anchors, Blocks, Patent Seine Twine, Main atreet, one door South of Front, oiisraiisriTAXi, o. marl'l-flOfli.m K. A. P. ANOTHER GREAT TRIUMPH!! W.n.DODD'S&CO'S CELEBRATED CONCRETE FIBE AND T3t-xrsl4rr Proof (Ditto 'tatc $0imtJiL COLUMBUS: SATURDAY MORKLNO. JULY 21, 1860. The Circumlocution Odes at Washington The following we clip from tbo Philadelphia Preti : : Dickeni hai made immertal th delaji and ecoentricilies and the oiroamlooution of Oorera-merit offices. Hi. aatira applie not onlj to Enr-land but to America. I accompanied a friend of mine lo th Tre.iury, the other day en a matter of buisineii. He had the good lock, by a imall paragraph in oa of the appopri-ation bills, to be entitled to a respectable sum of money. After a little vexatious beating in th buihes, hi aceount vaa started for th ohaa. A oourtly old gentleman, with gold ipeolacl and rubicund nose, handled it auspiciously amelled it all over, pored over several large ofiic books, then tumbled through the pages of oalf-bound, well-worn statutes, signed his nam with great deliberation, and gar us to th charge of a little owlish messenger, who after taking us through a passage, silent as the gray, unless when other messengers passed with muflled steps, down winding stairs, along another gloomy, passage, with dignified bow turned us over to a sour man, who was Tory long, very primly dressed, entirely hairless, and altogether unprepossessing.He eyed th paper closely, smelled it to his satisfaction, and gar us his autograph, and sent another Palinurus to guide us to the next port. And so we went to a doten offices, in each of which a like smellimg process took place, and at the end we had a paper oovered with autographs and chirographic mill-stone to mark the progress of Ihe ease. There were greasy, slovenly, mathematical old mon, and old men as preoise as Sir Roger de Coverly himself. Nearly all of them had soen a quarter of a century in doing this work. At lust we arrived at the warrant, and went away utterly bewildered at the tortuous road that leads to th coffers of our beloved Unole Sam (bat is, for sums less than a million. Sympathy of the Body with an Amputated (rf.. Member At Tower's Mill, in Lanesborougb, Mass , on Tuesday,! young man named Jerry Swan was caught by the arm in some machinery, and tha limb was so badly broken and mangled that immediate amputation was neoessary. This was successfully performed, but according to the Pittsburgh Eagle, Mr. Swan's connections with the dissevered limb did not cease with the operations. The Eagle saya: "On recovering from the stupor (produced by the use of chloroform,) Mr.Swan still complained of Ha aching hand. Late in the evening his distress became very great, and he insisted that the hand was cramped by being doubled up. The limb bad been placed in a small box and burried. His attendants dug it up and straightened the hand and he was soon easier. This morning the limb was again buried. But he soon oomplained of a sensation of oold and great pain in it. It was accordingly takin up again, wrapped up, and deposited in a tomb, since which he is again relieved." Tho Lata from tha Japanese Original Letter from "Tammy." Th following is a letter written by Tommy to a gentleman of this oity, as the Niagara was proceeding to sea, and sent back by tha pilot: Niw Yobk, June 30, 18C0. My dear , Philadelphia. You do not know how sorry I am I eoald not hak band farewell with you that morning when I leave Philadelphia. Never mind, I shall see you again bye-and-bye when I com back to America, or you perhaps com to Japan. I like Philadelphia very much beautiful place, great many manufactures there, and plenty friends. I am sorry I ean't get th pant and other things that I promised you in th hotel of Continental of your own place. Pleas tell my compliments to . I am much obliged to her to send me beautiful dress. I shall take it back to Japan to be try wear by our ladies, esteemed jnuch. I am much obliged for your beautiful picture. I shall take it back to Japan, hang it tip in my room and remember you all the time. I could not find yonr brother, who introduced by your letter; I want see him very ranch. Mr. Thomas took good care of me, but he has left New York now. Please tak these two likeness, one for yourself and the other to on of my friends, who I promisa in your own place, when I was there; be send me the letters from two each, but I could not send him the letters, my compliments lo tell him. I am much oblige to you. Mr. was sent me letter, give him my likeness. I am now on board vessel Niagara, going ahead. I seud to you from pilot. I am truly your good friend, (Signature in Japanese) Tatisu Onojsbo ("Tommi,") At Yeddo, Japan. Noti. Th letter enclosed two likenesses, on for th gentleman mentioned above, with his name and address, with the compliments of the donor, neatly written on the back, and th other the same way for th one who received the letter. Th Augustus (Ga.) Chronicle and Sentinel says, that, "to say th least of it, there is great danger of the election of Linooln. To prevent it beyond a doubt, there must be a ooalition of his opponents; and we think the most feasible plan is, for the Opposition to let everything els go, and devote their whol energies to the Stat of New York. Hor thirty-five votes, if they can be take awny from Lincoln, will defeat his revolutionary party, even though ha gets every other Northern vote, and California he cannot get. We have faith to believe tkat a union of the Bell and Douglas men in New York on on ticket would oarry three hundred thousand voles, and Lincoln will, probably, not get exceeding two hundred and eighly-five thousand. But to prevent all uncertainty, we hope the Bell, Breckinridge, and Douglas men will all unite on a common ticket and let the vote be oast, Douglas, 20, Bell, 10; and Breckinridge, 6; or, in fact, in proportion to the popular vote cast for each. By such an arrangement Lincoln cm be defeated, and by no other way that we know of." Severely patrol lu Hie l.attj (ireat Fir at Juun .'. Towers ''. Warehouse, (,'ltM'tmiutl, OUlo, June IbllO. Jlo.-ul Llits Cei-tiiLcate. IHar-Kiu. W. U Uo.'u a I'm (,'. .. ( r Heiewlth w ,,, , , ' ,.!. iOiit .T Safe during last HaUllUn -ills; it i taastrous lliv, we.i ur entire store wa. destroe"l. . "e Mged with uumttjont and heat about thesufe.everj llilnulu it. immediate locality being de.. troved, aud it at all intlamuialile, reduced to ashes. We imrcnascd tula safe from yon alwnt six months ago, oadii ha, mtirelf fulJlIM ynur representations. u ..... ,.niu nFU,rMl ll nur Luoksaud papers with. out any line or letter being deuced, but tci(mi tifn of Are lieing leit on mem. . ,n .......... I..- fr..m fire ami teen heal was so entire, that ,1,. p.. varnish, and paint on the inside wood work i. nHrfect as when the .ate was marie. as perfect as w lien tue juHN 0. TOWERS 4 CO. We h.Tesomeof the papers that were In tliissafe during the tire, and will lie ulcasua to uow mem iu j r Our safes have naver failed to preserve their content. from either Fife or Burglar; ana aro ewireip re. jrom ''The construction of th. BURGLAR PR"P I it-- -...i (n ..n,,r.tll,n with our "GlthA r AMEKl CAN KEY KKUISTKR KICK" (which possesses the greas aud mlHuvt advantnge of having no krp cnrlty of a nermi.M.n;; key en which liW,(Hjo,(HKI change can he mule,) tnoy win uemuuu :" ' (!T i Anl A DAMS fe FIELD, Lumber Merch.nts, Dealers In all kind, of Worked Floor-lg. Lumber, Lath and Shingles, corner of Spring and Water Ste., Uolumhus, who. myT dly gnle Manufacturers. Restaurants. BULL'S HEAD SALOON, EATING AND HOARDING HOUSE. JOSEPH SWAIN, Proprietor. Th. finest brand, of Liquor and Tobacco oonatantly on hand, and rooms re-ilttes Ira a neat and fomfortable style, No. 144 Fourth street. In th. Market Placo. m3-d3in-s a n J. M. ZIG1-EB, Ic.Cre.rn Saloon. Neil'. New Building, corner Bay and High atreet., Oolumbu., Ohio. Alw Dealer in 'Con r.cfioo.. Choice Liquor., and a variety of Fane,r No-.a t. mji-utya BILLIARD TABLES, W J. Sharp'. Tulles, with his newly invented patent Cushions, woll known to ho supplier to any now in use Patented November 15, Ittntt. Orders addressed to 148 Xultou St., N. Y., the ouly place where they are manufactured. my7-dom Jyio-d: HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S Extract Buchn, Etxraot Buchn, Extract Bnchu, Extract Buchn, Extract Bnchu, Extract Bucuu. FrtH HECRET ASD FOR SECRET AND HELMBOID'I II ELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S HELM HOLD'S II ELM HOLD'S Extract Bnchu, Kxtract Bnchu, Kxtract Bnchu, . Kxtract Bnchu, Extract Buchn, Kxtract Bncnn. DELICATE DISORDERS' VELICATH VISUKUKttn. m. l ,mi UJ S x- ;-- - .;- IV f AMMMOTH Ivl LIA 7mn CULTIVATOR, Ell ted and Published by Sullivan D. Harris, at Colombu. Ohio, for One Dollar per 7 1 " STAMPING AND EMBROIDERY, No. 303 8. HlKh-St.-Mr.. Cox haying removed from Eighth St. to her present residence, IfPreP""!1 'd?,? " kinds of line and fancy Stamping and Embroidery at the loweet prices, on short notice. mvildm tan STEAM POWER B1L- IARD TABLE Manufactory, J. M. Brunswick a n.,.,,ri,.inr Factorv on . n. corner oi nim ana Canal Streets. Office and Warehouse, No. 8 Sixth Street, between Maiu aud Walnut, Ciutinnatl, Ohio. P. ft (let BruiHwicVs Improved Patent Gemluaaffo Cuthion. marlU.'tiO'dOm NlMC-ellaneous. " ' : EVE AND EAR. Special attention given to dieeasesof the Eye and Er, ...roiMtl ana medical. H. i. G'll, M. 47, East State St., Oo'umbus, 0. D., Occulist, No. niaylB.atnu FOR SECRET FOR BFVRET FOR HECItET FOR 8EVRET PHOTOGRAPHS. M Witt, four door, north or th. American Hotel, over RudisiU's Uat Store, make, life-sited Photographs, col-ored in Oil and Pastell, as well as Daguerreotypes, Am brotypea, and all kinds or Sua raintiugs. uiy2,'tS0-dly.s. s ' J. C. WOODS. Broad street, Columbus, O., Ageut for Chlckerlng & Son,. Piano Forte., Mason t Hamlin's Melodeonss, and dealer in Sheet Music aud musical merchandise. apa'HO-dly-K.A.B. - S. B. H ANNUM, Attorney at Law, Notary Public and Commissioner of Deeds. Denosltions. Ac., fT the States of Csltfnrnla, . Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Indiana, '. Michigan, Missouri, Wisconsin and Nebraska Territory. Office No. 6 "Johnson Building," High street, Columbus, Ohio. Devote, special attention to making Collections and taking Depositions. Refer by permission to John D. Martin, Ksq., Hanker, Lancaster, O.i Messrs. Swayna Baber, Columbus. O.; Messrs. Cipperly, Hoover A Go , Citv ot New York; Chauucey N. Olds, Esq., Columbus, Ohio. mar!W-dtaug9'00 JAMES S. AUSTIN, attorney at Law and Notary Public, Oolumbu., Ohio. omca, Room no. i in roet vraoe ouii'iing, un ow.pbi. Special attention given to foreign collection.. docl2dly WMrDKNNISOw"rHrBrCARRINGTON, Attorney, and Counsellors at Law, Oolumbu., 0. Office, No.. 1 and 9 Odeon Building. Special attention ri'en to tha Law of Patent, and Insurance. apr22'G0dly-ia SEWISG MACHINE WORK, NO. 218 EAST FRIEND ST. tr n ni.luu. will, iwn Tears exiMiriencn upon Wheeler & WHson's Machine, Is prepared to do all kinds of sew. ing and stitching on the moat reasonable tonus. Please givo her a cull. May 8, I860. d3mE.A.B. Great Inducement to Traveler. TMIRMIIIill TRUNK MANUFACTORY! r uiviitl Tt tt ATT. No II Weat State etreet, oppo- l alto th. Amoriran Hotel, f'olnmhns, Ohio, Manufactuer. and dealers iu all kinds of Trunks, Valises, Carpet Bags, c , Ac. We have on hand ann mane looroor nieo, r..,... Sole Leather Trunks, Ladles' Dress Trunks, Bunret Box-es Ac ,a'l of which hio warranted to equal any that can be honirht East or west, ann at prices io mi, .o na.n....i.in. ,1n,iwilh neatness and dislKltch. Oive us a call before you purchase elsewhere, and judge for yourself.'., mayio.im-na NATIONAL HOTEL. I. B. BAKER, - - - - l'ROPRIETOR. 3NTo. S3VI3 Ilielx St., COLU.UDl'S, OHIO. fiitnsted near the Depot, and convenient to the bnsines. part or town. Can and sea us. rnce per oaj , ar.r6 dV.m-E A B WESTERN HOTEL. 1.. O. EDSOV, PEOPHIBTOB, GALION, - - - - - - - OHIO Ju25-dS Yale and Oxford Neck Ties. A NEW ASSORTMENT OP THESE fuhli.nable Ties, also Marseilles and Lilian Tie. in great variety, aud much below usual prices, at i30 First door north of Nell House, ASD DELICATE VllUtillt.KH. AND DELICATE DISORDERS. AND DELICATE DISORDERS. Aiun DELICATE DISORDERS. a . and Kneel flo Remedy a PoeMI-re and Speelno Remedy A Poaltlwa and Speolflo Remedy A Poattlva and Specific Remedy A Positive and Specific Remedy A Poaltlve and Specific Remedy FOR DISEASES OF THE BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNErS, DROPSr. BLADDER. GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY BLADDER. GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, MOPST, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL. K I DN FYS DROPSY, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, OROA NIC WEAKNESS, ORGAN 1C WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, And all diseases of the Sexual Oraaxt, And all Dueata of the Sexual Organs, And all DUeamt of the Sexual Orjoos, And all Duea of Ihe Sexual Organt, And all Dueaut of the Sexnal f(r,;naj, And all Dueatm of the Sexual Orgam, AKISINO FROM Exeewes, Kxpcnrea, and I",PC" " K' Kxces.es Exposure., and Imi"uJ'" HJ?' sLuaaa.aai mwA imnrndenc'iri ID EjIIO Ex"; Expire.; a. d .J-le. U Life, Kxceeaea, ii.xpo.urc, " ;r"z--;- i . lr Excesses, Exposure., and Imprudencle. In Lire, - . nrf.in.nnr. and whether .listing In mm -D .11 V K SI Fsmales, tak. no more Pilla ! They are of no avail for Complaints Incident to tho eex. I'se Extract Bnchn. Helmbold'. Extract Bucho la a Medicine which la per-fcctly pleaaant In it. But ImmadlaU In it. action, giving Health and Vigor to the Frame, Bloom to the Pallid Cheek, and rctorlng th. patient to ajerfect state o. priRiTY, Helmbold'. rxtract Buchn i. prepared according to Phannarr and Chemistrv, and Is prescrioea ana uses j pnTfHB MOST EMINENT PHYSICIANS. . Delay no longer. Procure the remedy at once. Fries SI per bottle, or six for J5. Depot 104 South Tenth .treet, Philadelphia. ,....iT,lrif YJaalera Trying to palm off their own or other article, of B0OHTJ ea the renutation attained by ..BTt HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHtJ, Tha Original and only Genuine, W. desire to run on the MERIT OF OTJB ARTICLE I Their', is worthleee I. .old at much lee. rate, and com-missions, consequently paying a much lietter proflt. WI DEFY COMPETITION 1 Ask for Uelmbold's Extract Buchu. Tain no other. n.i I A In I- if Swh wnM. M BOBEBTS SAMUEL, Agenta, aerST-dly Columbus, Ohio. A legal gentleman in Chicago, formerly of South Reading, a Douglas Democrat, is of opinion that "the next President will be either Abraham Lincoln or Joe Lane." He then proceeds, as follows: 'Linooln vf ill either he elected by the people, or Lane will be elected Vioe President by the Senate, and the House baing uoable tp.elect a President on the fourth of M"c".'ruridge and Lane will carry afi the' South whioh does not go for Bell and Everett. I very much doubt Douglas' being able to cirry Illinois or Indiana, as matters now look. One hundred and four eititens of Hannibal, Missanri, 'believing that the sucoess or tue jrinoiples of the Bepublioan party is necessary to the well being of the country, have united in a letter to Frank Blair to come and make thetn a Republican speech. The Omaha Nebraskian is a philosophio sheet It apologizes for, or rather explains, the absence nf a nresidential ticket from the head of its columns, by saying that it has a preferonoe for both ciiDiliUaiea OI tne uemoorano usrij uui that, inasmuch as Nebraska has no vote, it is fnllv ta keeD alive the intestine broil for naught, Therefore, it recommends to all good democrats to keep qutet and pray lor tne rignt. Aa Iowa correspondent of the Chioago Prcie and Tribune writes : Donglas' boast of what non-intervention has done for slavery ana tne ooutn, coupieu wuu Maniamin's exDose in the Sonate, of the secret understanding of Demoorata in 1851, that each winir of tha eartv should advoeate their partic ular theory of the Kansas-Nebraska bill, and the doctrine therein contained, and pledging themselves to abide tho decision of the SupremeCourt on the question f Blavery iu the Territories, are facts tkat tell with honest minds. Republicanism is gaining ground in this oounty, as also everywhere iu the State. Death of a Rshakabl Womah. The wife of Mr. Caleb Brinton, residing on Ualdetnan s farm, opposite this city, died on Monday, and was intorred in Mount Kalma Cemetery yesterday afternoon. This woman was probably the largest woman in the United States. We did not learn what her weight was, but it may be judged when we state that she measured seven feet six inches around the waist I For the last two or three years she has been unable to move, from excessive obesitv. and yet enjoyed more than ordinary good health. llanieburg (Po.) Patriot. A DOQ 0VB NlAOAH A FALLS WITHOUT IltJUET The truth of such stories as have been told (without reoeiving muoboredenoe)of dogs going over the Falls and surviving the passage, was tested the other day, according to the magara Falls Gazette, and fairly established. The Ga zette ears : John, the drayman, (who, by the by, must be a naraueartea eussj tursw un uug mtu iuv , p- ids near Goat Island Bridge, and immediately afterwards went to the foot of the ferry stairs and found biro but little injured by the tremen dous leap. The experiment was tried to con. vines some incredulous persons. A ourious divorce case in the Gallia county Common Fleas Court, is thus related by the Gallipolis Neat: A resDeetable couple of this county were mar ried last fall; the young mau look bis bride to his father's to live till a house could be built. After a residence of some weeks, the husband, (who was very young) became dissatisfied with i h nmaneet. which is said to east shadows be fore, and finally the sudden illness and changed annearanno of the wife, caused considerable un easiness in the family, and espeoially on the r,art nf tha husband. Suspicions were aroused, and searoh made by the family and neighbors which proved successful in the dtsoovery of a new-born child, which had been buried in a ra-vlna anma distance from the house, which, when exhumed, was examined by the jury, who did nnt aeiminate anv one. Th. veanll. of the trial upon ine application was that a divorce was granted, notwithstanding there seems to be a mystery hanging over the whole case. Who dodged the vote on the Homestead bill? Stephen A. Douglas. Who dodged en the admission of Kansas? . Stephen A. Douglas. Who claims that "my great principle," popular sov. ereienty, bas given to slavery a degree and a half mora of the public domain than the slave power claimed? Stephen A. Douglas. Isn't he a pretty candidate for the votes of free labor ing eo f i The Chicago Times having claimed that Lin coln will not, and that Douglas will, carry New York in November next, a correspondent of the Press and Tribune offers the conductor of the Times or any other persons the following wager: I will bet $100 that the Douglas electors will not receive the plurality of the popular vote of New York. $100 that the Lincoln elector will. $100, that the latter will carry the State by a nluralitv rote of 6,000. r in oiiii .... $100, that, they will carry u oy a piuia". vote of 16,000 $100, that they will carry New York by a plurality vote of 20,000. $100. that they will oarry New York by a plurality vote of 30,000. These bet to be taken together. The Last Survivor ot Banker Hill. Th statement ha frequently been made by the newspapers, and endorsed by Mr. Everett hi. lata Knnrtk of Julr oration, that there is . . loft nf that band of heroes who first w.iheiond tha shock of British arms in the open fi.M Eio-htv-nve Tears having elapsed sinoe that world-renowned struggle, the burden of probabilities would favor suob a conclusion; yet h atatemont is not correct. There i one who took part in that memorable Battle, ana suose-qent event of the revolution, yet living "full of Roman Newspapers. Nothing bring a North American In Rome more in contract with our eonntry than th newspaper or rather the no-newepaptrs. The prinoipal newspaper indeed the only on I saw published-in Rome, was the Roman Journal, the official Gasette. It if published .daily, except on hcliday about four time a week. It is a small folio sheet about twelve by sixteen inches ha no editorial matter, Almost no advertisements, and is entirely made op of clipping from th foreign newspaper not, however, including our. never saw in it any mention whatever ef onr country. Our Republican, Protestant country appears to be entirely ignored in the papal oity. And I do not remember hearing the question asked. "What is the new?" And strange as it may seem to an Amerioan, this way of the whole community minding their own business at least, not minding thoir neighbor' business, nor troubling themselevs much about the rest of the world, is very well for a change. It ha ils good side, and it agreeable side, too. It almost make one ask himself, i it, after all, quite certain that such an infinite gabble of newspaper as we have pri ing into everything, blurting out everything, gossiping about everything, blundering to-day and correcting it to morrow is a real gospel dispensation? When exeess is the worst? I am, however quite sure that no amount of fire and fagota, and holy inquisitions, could aver make us believe that the strict censorship of the press which exists here is any better than taewildest lioense which we ever have in America. The mean between the two is, of eoaree, the happy and golden mean and the newspaper is like everything else earthly, there must be a taste of imperfection in it the power to do good must bring with it the power to do evil. We do not look at a Roman newspaper any more, it is so absolutely worthless to us but I preserve to take with me to New York, a file of one week' paper of the offioial pontifioial gaieete. I may live to see a regular American newspaper published in the oity of Rome, when it will be interesting to compare the two. Oh, if I could only be certain of living longenoagh to make the oomparision I Th babe is still unborn whioh ehall see the beginning of such reform. The shook which the revolution of 1848-'49 gave to Pious IX, who reallyhad some thought of improvement, has extinguished all hope of a melioration through the Churoh. The New York Mercury has a series of bur lesque "Biographies of the Candidates," from whioh we extraot the following interesting information conoeruing Mr. Douglas: Mr. Douglas was born at Bennington, Vt., on Ihe Fourth of July, 1770, and demonstrated the utility of Squatter Sovereignty before he threw off hisrinoline. His parent belonged to a noble Sootch family, and when Stephen wa two year old they emigrated with him to Illinois. It wa during thi journey he gave vent to a remark which ha since become olassical. Hi father asked him if he would have aa apple, and on reoeiving an answer in the affirmative, mad a "split in it preparatory lo dividing it into two pieces when Mr. Douglas suddenly grasped the whole, exclaiming 'The Union must and .hall be preserved." This immortal sonleno wa immediately telegraphed to all the paper in the United State and Canada, and prooured the election of Mr. Douglas to the office of Judge of good whiskey, a soon as he arrived in Illinois. When about ten years old he commenced writing for Harper' Maa-asine. and finally contributed a series of humorous article to th editorial column of the Chioago Times. By way of oonoluding our biography, we give the following extraot from one or Mr. Douglas' most eloauent speeches: nr another man.'acooro'eilW the CifimUwRBtt', but the right of another man over thi man, or that man over this man, wr. mau is w,...uB that man should be his own man, inaepenaeni of every other man. This gentlemen, is squatter . a . . l II rl. atn. sovereignty wttnoni muigauuu. iuio u-thusissm. ' Tne Carnage at tha Battle of tha .a,te Kranco-Austrlan War. New York Times matter in nearly th same state the amount of revenue collected at that point being $164.76, against $8065.83 expended for the service of collecting and for keeping, the funds of the ' Government in a suitable manner. In Washington Territory we fimd a larger amount collected, inasmneh a there i s greater number of foreign vessel entered in thai dislriot than at any in this 8tat. Th total amount of receipt at Port Towaiend during three years ending June, 1850, wa $19,441.07, and the expense for th same period amounted to $51,607.05, leavins: (a balance against th United State of $32,966.88. Portland ( Oregon) Advertiser. . . A l.IO.-8AVER'S RECORD.' Edward Everett's View ana RlaTerr. n.nt years," and venerated for hi moral worth as as well as for his age and publio servioes. In the town of Acton, Me., on a beautiful ridge of land situated about a mile from Milton Mills, N. H., stand a oottage farm house, unpretending in it appearance and bearing evidence of a very respectable antiquity. Thepasser-by will often notice a gray-haired man, raariino- attentively by the window, or walking with a single cane peronance eugagsum me ordinary labors of the nneoanaman. xae .iranier will perceive nothing very remarkable . . . . . i i . a , 11 in tha tklcK-sel. Bllitnur-ueus uini ouu won- nreaerved. warthy feature of thi old man of apparently eighty years; but the residents of the adjacent country invoiuaianij ueuu wim reverenoe a they pass him. And well they may he is the last of the Bunker lliu patn. nta David Kinnison, who long survived hi con federate of the famous Boston lea Tarty, was living in 1861, ia Chicago, at the extraordinary age of one hundred anu ntteen year, ne nas passed away. Ralph Farnum, the last of the Uunker mil neroes, suit uvea, aiiuuugu un. nearly attained a span and a half of the ipaoe allotted lo man. His on hundred and fourth birthday was celebrated at Milton Mills en the 7th. We have already given, from the pen ef a correspondent, ome notioe of this interesting affair. Although no pains wer taken to extend a notice of the event beyond the immediate vicinity of the veteran' residence, a very large concourse of people were in attendance. The features of the occassioa were an address, and one hundred and four greetings frem a twelve pounder, and a dinner enlivened with toasts aad speeches. Mr. Farnum, we learn, was not in the midst of the battle. Having been enrolled only on the day previous, it wa hi lot to be detailed among a guard to take sharge of artillery and hairiaio. at some distance front the redoubt. In so close a proximity to the prinoipal scene of strife, the observations which be mace, ana ais- linotlv reoolleots to this day, are highly inter esting, and we trost they will beeivea to the publio by some competent pen. When we reflect how few net-son living ean even remember the event itself as a child of twelve at that lime would now be ninety-five year old aliviag actor in that bloody drama become at enoe aa obieot of interest, respect and veneration. Boston Journal July Wih. Heart Is Power. A man's force in the world, other things being eqna), is just in the ratio of the force and strength of his heart. A full-breasted man is always powerful man; if he is erroneous, then be is cowerful for error: if the thing 1 in hi heart, he ia, sure to make it notorious, even though it it ia a downriirht falsehood. Let a man be ever su ignorant, still if hi heart be full of love for the cause, he become a powerful man for that object, because be has heart-power heart-foroe. A man may be deBoient in many of the advantages of education, in many ef those niceilies whioh . are so muck looked upon in society; but once give him a strong heart, that beata hard, and there is no mistake about his power. Let him have a heart that is right full up lo the brim with an object, and that man will do the thing, or else he will die gloriously defeated, and wiU glory in bis defeat.Spur-jeon. A correspondent of the write in a lato letter ' It has already been ahowa by a dooumant published at Brescia by the chief Italian surgeon of the place, that theaccidetrt at Solferino on the allied aide, which entered for treatment at tha hoanital of Brescie alone, wer a little over 81,000; if to thi be added the men who entered the hospital ot otner towns aim - l thnaa who had wounds wmcn urn not drive them into the hospitals (and the hospitals An ..pnitnt nf the intense heat were avoided by every one who could nurse has wound in camp,) and tha lifinrt lult on tne neiu. wa nrrivo mo.i- la'ily a t figure approximating 45,000 or about nne-fnmih of the entire army, not more than fi.;M. nf which were engaged. lr. liertue- r.nd nna of the Drincinal surgeons of the Frannh army. Director of the Medioal Bohool at Algiers, and chief surgeon to one of the corps a" armct in the late Italian campaign, ha just published a small work of 200 pages on the surgical service of the campaign. t n,ir tie Keriheand states that the air.tiea fnena of the Freuoh army in Italy had reached, on the day of the battle of Solferiuo, 218,000 men, and he gives the same figures as th Bresoia surgeon, as the number of wounded who entered the hospital of that town afterward, "Nfor than 17.000 Freneh. 18,000, Ital ians, and about 1,600 Austrian total, oo," , men." He further says, "that from the 6th of June to the 17th of August, a period which comprised the evaouat ions from Msgenta, Ma-legnano and Solferino, Ihe hospitals of Milan reoeived in round numbers, 21,000 French 6,000 Italians, and 7,000 Austrians total, 84,-000." These figures embrace also those attack ed with any serious disorder, sucn lor example a typhoid fever, Out tne army was rem., k..iih. rlnrlnir the whole campaign, and every man not attacked with an absolutely grave disorder, was treated outside; so that the entries r-nm thia eanaa were lnBieiiiufci".. ut .ill .h..rB in rerard to the statistics at Milan, that while all, or nearly all, of the wounded of Magenta and Malegnano wereonrneu is.ic, .,u a certain proportion of these from Solferino are comprised in the number. As a last observa tion, the officers ana very muj v. .... who hod friends in the country, wsre treated ia private houses The following fact will doubtless excite a thrill of astonishment throughout the country, '' and may possibly render it necessary to call another National Convention of th Union-Saver : ,, It seems that in 1887 the following resolve were adopted by the Massachusetts Legislature:Resolved, That Congress has, by th Constitution, power to abolish slavery and the slave trade in the District of Columbia, and that there is nothing in the terms and vircumstaaoe of the act s -of cession by Virginia and Maryland, or otherwise, enforcing any legal or moral restraint on it exeroiie. , Resolved, That Congress ought to take measure to effect the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia. , Resolved, That the rights of humanity, tha-claim of justice and the Common good alike demand the suppression by Congress of lha slav trad carried on ia and through the District.Resolved, That Congress has, by thi Constitution, power to abolish slavery in th Territories of the United States. Resolved, That no new State should hereafter be admitted into the Union, whose constitution of government shall permit the existence of domestic slavery therein. Resolved, That Congress has, by Ihe Constitution, power to abolish the traffic in slave between the different States of the Union. Resolved, That the exorcise of this power i demanded by the principles of humanity and justice. . ' i ' la 1839 the Hen. Nathaniel Borden, of Massachusetts, propounded to Mr. Everett the following interrogatories: ' ' 1st. Are you in favor of the immediate abolition, by law, of Slavery in the Distrust of Co lumbia, and of the slave traffio between tho States of the Union? 2d. Are you opposed to the admission into the Union of any new State, the Constitution of whioh tolerates domestio slavery? The following is Mr. Everett' reply: Washington, D. C, Oot. 24, 1839. Dear Sib : On Saturday last, I only received your letter of the 18tb, propounding to me certain interrogatories, and earnestly requesting an answer. You are aware that aoveral resolves on the subject of these inquiries, and their kindred topic, aeeompenied by a very able report, wer introduced into the Senate of the Commonwealth year before last by a joint committee of tb houses, of which the late lamented Mr. Alvoro was Chairman. These resolve, after having been somewhat enlarged by amendment, were adopted by the Legislature. They appear to cover the whole ground of your two interrogatories. Having respectfully co-operated in tht eiful report of the Chairman of the Committee, J reepond to your inquiries in the affirmative. . Th first of the subjects embraoed In you inquiry i the only one of them which came before Congress while I was a member. . I voted in tha negative on the motion to lay apon the table tho petition of the Amerioan Anti-Slavery Society for the abolition of elavery in the District of Columbia, and other motions of like character iutroduced to stave off the consideration of thi class of petition. " ! '- ' ' ' t - . . I am, Dear 8ir, very reepeotfully, ' . . Your friend and servant, ' , EDWARD EVERETT. . To Nathaniel Borden. ... These little remniscences have been revived1 by the Richmond Enquirer, muoh to the grief of the "Union-loving" supporters of theBell-Everett ticket in Virginia. ' ', ' Curloaltlea of th Revenue. . ft mav not be uninteresting to anow the .n,..m of income and expenditure in the sever .1 ..iLriln districts on the Pacifio ooast, and ,t,.rfor insert the figure, a copied from Ihe report of the Seoretary of the Traury At Astoria tn revenue iur in. ii jm embraced in the report was aa follows: $4173,64 in 1857, $8767,73 ia 1858, and $3921.71 in 1859; whilst the expenses inourred in the tame diatriot during the Bams period wa $21,254 61 iu 1857, $12 187 73 in 1858, and $3413,13 in 1859, being nearly twenty thousand dollars more than the income for the same period of timel Of course the "proper officer" has vouches and receipts for this vast expenditure, but no doubt it would prove an interesting task to discover the multi-tudious channels through which the fund is appropriated. ' - ' At Gardiner, in Uubqua County, there stands an unfinished frame shanty which, during the high water, bas to be approached in canoes, and this superstructure is known as the Custom Home, from whence, in three yean, ha been paid out the modest sura of $19,449 61! The Collector at that port has been very busy ia his official capacity, for we find he has collected, as revealed in the same period, no less a srtra than $58.32! leaving only $19,891.30 a a balanea for clerk hire, tationary, repair of "Custom House," and all the multifarious expenses incidental to keeping up a large establishment in the entrenol to the Umbqua valley. If we step down to Port Oxford w shall find A Q,uaker'a Cad ot Honor. i . . A gentleman of the broad-brim persuasion, after selling his "truck" in market, yesterday morning, stopped inth tor of a friend for an hour' rest before leaving for bis home, com thirty mile distant, and during his slay' entertained a number of bis oity acquaintences with a spicy fund of anecdotes and a rare budget of sensible talk. He avowed hi code of honor and of moral conduct somewhat in thi wise: If a man cheat the once, sham on him; if b cheat thee twice, shame on thee. If a man deceive thee trust him not again, if he insults thee go away from him; irhe strike thee, thrash him like smoke. If thee have lost thy eredit, be in-dustriou and thee will gain it. If thee have lost thy property be industrious,, bonest and frugal, and thee will acquire more. If thee have a wife, take eare of her; and if thee have not, get one immediately! Petersburg Express, 13M. ThePrlne of Wales Who and what be I. It may Interest onr readers to know what the numerous title of the youngPrinceof Walesare, and we therefore quote them in detail from the laat edition of British Peerage: ' "The Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornwall. The most high, puissant and illustrous Prince Albert Edward, Prince of the United Kingdom of Great Britaia and Ireland, Princeof Wales, Duke of Saxony, Prince of Coburg and Gotha, great Steward of Scotland; Duke of Cornwall and Kothsay; Earl of Chester, Carrick and Dublin; Baron of Renfrew; Lord of the Isles, K. G, and a colonel in the Army." He will be nineteen years of age on the 9th or November next. On the 4th of December, 1841, when he was not yet a month old, he was oreat-ed, by Patient, under the Great Seal, Prince of Wale and Earl of Chester. The titles of Great Steward of Scotland, Duke of Rothsay, Earl of Carriok, Baron of Renfrew, and Lord of th Isles, were, by act of Parliament, in 1849, vested in the eldest son and heir apparent of the throne of Sootland forever. The titles Earl of Chester and Duke of Cornwall, belong to mm oy euu earlier Patents, and the remaining title Earl of Dublin wa granUd to him by the Queen in 1849- ' A Rett of the Pioneer Day. Dr. Minor, of this place, ha in hi possession a copper coin which was picked up a few days since, near the site of old Fort St. Clair. The coin was crusted over with rust, and required a vigorou application of nitrio acid to render the letter upon it legible. On the obverse side of the piece is an emblem of industry, surrounding which are the words, ".A or Cecsarea," with the date of coinage "1786." On the reverse sidei th motto, "EPluribu Cnutn, encircling the Amerioan slleld or coat of arm. This coin was doubtless dropped by a soldier or follower of the army of Wayne or St. Clair, in the day when the "reveille drum"-at the old Fortawoke the echoes of the forest now known a "Bruce'a Woods.'; It ia a rare coin indeed, it is the first of the kind we have ever seen; and being found in that locality renders it a valued relic Eaton (O.) Register. " ' . i The Marion Mirror (Douglas) console iUelf for the Piqna Enauirer hauling down the Douglas flag and hoisting that of Lincoln, by Baying "Thi is just a it ahould bo." Just so. : -